Exterminating the Pests in Your Life

Brian Hedges

I recently had to call the exterminator. My father-in-law was visiting and thought he spotted termites. I tried not to panic, hoped insurance would cover the costs, and had someone come inspect the house. Thankfully, no termites. That was the good news. The bad news is that we do have carpenter ants. And, based on this fella's look in our crawl space, a few mice to boot. When I got home that day, Holly (my wife) was ready to sell the house. She doesn't do mice. So, now I'm on a quarterly pest control plan and am a few hundred dollars poorer.

Dealing with pests is annoying. I don't have time for this kind of stuff. Why did God make ants and mice anyway?

But not dealing with pests is dangerous. Carpenter ants (along with termites) eat wood and can cause serious structural damage to a house. And mice carry diseases. If you don't exterminate the pests, they just might exterminate you. Or make you really sick. Or cost you a lot of money in home repairs later on. Better deal with the pesky pests now than ignore them and pay for it later.

It kind of reminds me of what a seventeenth-century theologian named John Owen once said about sin. "Be killing sin or sin will be killing you." Sins are the termites of the soul, the carpenter ants that eat away at our hearts, our inner lives, the subterranean parts of our very selves. Sins are like mice: they may seem harmless enough when you look at them behind glass in the pet store, but they also carry deadly disease.

Having to deal with sin in my life is sometimes annoying. I don't particularly enjoy confession and repentance. But not dealing with sin is dangerous. And the Apostle Paul tells us that they must be exterminated: "If you live according to the flesh, you will die; but if by the Spirit you put to death the misdeeds of the body, you will live" (Romans 8:12, NIV). Be killing sin, or sin will be killing you.

So, how do you kill sin?

Look to the Cross

Well, first we must go to the place where sin has already been slain: the cross of Christ. "'He himself bore our sins' in his body on the cross, so that we might die to sins and live for righteousness; ‘by his wounds you have been healed'" (1 Peter 2:24, NIV). Or, to quote John Owen again, "There is no death of sin without the death of Christ." The only way you can really kill a sin is through faith in Jesus, who has already died for your sins on the cross.

Get to the Root

Next, it's important that we get to the root of sin in the heart. Jesus taught that wickedness and sin come from the heart (Matthew 15:18-20) and Paul exhorts us to go after not just sinful deeds, but evil desires (Colossians 3:5). To draw on the pest illustration again, it's not enough to just stomp on the ants when they appear. Our exterminator sprayed the perimeter of our house, our trees, and more. This was evidently the best chance of killing off the nest. Our sinful actions always spring from a deeper nest of disordered affections, sinful motives and evil desires. To kill sin, you have to go deep.